C
cheddarsox
Guest
Yes! I remember that well. I came from a Catholic family of six kids. I spent Sat morning polishing all the shoes in the house. Then we washed all the cars. Sat evening we took our baths, and then ironed clothes so we would look nice in church. We attended confession about once a month.And in years past when most working people worked a half day Saturday as part of the regular routine, great preparations were made the balance of the day for Sunday services. Shoes were polished, best clothes prepared, much washing, ironing and starching in those days. As one Protestant friend put it to me for their services: we bustled around on Saturdays because Sunday was the day for good eating, good preaching and good singing. Many Catholics did the same.
Going to church was seen as a social, a communal and a religious obligation and as a priority in family life. As such it was prepared for in a big way, not the least of which was Saturday confession.
Sun was church, then ( I had three brothers, all in Catholic schools) FOOTBALL. The Catholic schools couldn’t afford their own stadiums, so we played on Sundays, because the public schools used the stadiums Fri and Sat!
Our week was certainly built around our faith in every way, shape and form.
Good memories all!
cheddar